STAR WARS KOTOR 2 PC CHEATS SERIES
Remember the days where vehicular combat games were cool? Twisted Metal and Vigilante 8 are two series that immediately come to mind but there were others that wanted in on that madness too! Somewhere along the line someone thought Star Wars would fit right in with that style of game giving us, Star Wars: Demolition.
It’s easy to lose countless hours into this game in the single-player alone, but being able to play competitively or co-operatively adds so much more to the package that it stands tall over the more modernized Battlefront games that would come after it.
Even though the graphics are understandably dated after 17 years, you can still hop into this game and have a blast without issue. You want large, open-ended battles with units flooding the field and taking control over certain locations? Well this is how you do it. This title laid the groundwork for what any future game of this type should be. With a wonderfully in-depth campaign, a number of different units and factions to pick from, and battles that could transition from space to inside a capital ship, Battlefront II was constant Star Wars action. Unlike the content barren namesakes that would be produced by EA, this Star Wars: Battlefront was developed by Pandemic Studios and published by LucasArts themselves. Yes, there are worse games than this from a technical aspect (Kinect: Star Wars comes to mind) but this Battlefront was where EA started to wage war against consumers and fans alike while using the Star Wars name to do so. A season pass could be purchased to add in more content but it’s all stuff that should have been in the game proper. The same could not be said about its predecessor, Star Wars: Battlefront (2015.) There was no single-player campaign to be found outside of some terrible training missions basically, and the multi-player was bare bones in terms of maps and scenarios. But in defense of the game, at least it had some decent content available for single-player and multi-player. The fiasco resulted in legislation in some countries and a talking to between publisher Electronic Arts, and Star Wars rights holders, Disney. You may very well remember the controversy that arose over Star Wars: Battlefront II in 2018 regarding “loot boxes” and how a full-priced game was pushing micro-transactions so heavily to allow people to play as their favorite Star Wars characters. Oh, and one of the playable characters is a tusken raider named Hoar, pronounced like ‘whore.’ Which makes it hysterical when the pre-fight announcer says, “Luke Skywalker, versus Hoar!” If this game had been given to Capcom’s “Street Fighter” team to work on, there could’ve been something truly memorable here. It’s especially sad considering this game actually has some cool features like unlockable characters from the EU and the ability to change from fighting with or without your weapon mid-fight. Some of the special moves of the characters are very unintuitive to perform and some of the combat mechanics are best described as janky and stiff. So what, you expect a lightsaber to be a one-hit kill? No, the real problem just comes from unresponsive controls and an overall lack of polish. The swords in the “Soul Calibur” series don’t dismember your opponents and no one complains about that. Some reviewers have criticized the game for how the lightsabers act more like Nerf bats which is a ridiculous complaint. Using the same cheat method, type "dancedancemalak" to turn Darth Malak into a dancing female Twilek.A Star Wars fighting game? What could possibly go wrong? Well, turns out a lot could. Whether or not you can see the console, follow the instructions and the cheats will work fine. If the console is activated, you will know as your character will stop moving. Some have reported that they are not working, and this turned out to be the case. You may lose all or part of your configuration for the game if you use this file instead of modifying your own.Įditor's Note: It's been stated that you cannot see what you're typing when entering the cheats. Always make a backup before overwriting configuration files. You can replace your kotor2.ini file with this one if you are having trouble modifying the file. Note: The following file ( kotor2cht.zip) contains a modified version of the kotor2.ini file with the EnableCheats line added. While playing, press ` (below tilde) and or to activate the console then type any of the following cheat codes followed by (may need to use ENTER on the num pad): Edit the file with Notepad and under the line add the following line: Find the file called " swkotor2.ini" in your Knights of the Old Republic game folder.